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United Pre#s
World Wide
News Service
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Special Feature Edition For California Game
Vol. XXIV
Los Angeles, California, Friday, November 4, 1932.
No. 40
Helen Gahagan To Appear On I Stage Today
Judge William M. Bowen Will Present Debate Cups to Orators
F. Clinton Jones To Get First Place Award in Annual Contest
Helfn Gahagan. star of the current Belasco production, “The Cat and the Fiddle,” will be presented in assembly in Bovard auditorium at 9:55 this morning, Mulvey White, assistant secretary to the president announced last night.
In addition, winners of the Bowen extemporaneous speech contest " ill be presented with silver loving cups by the contest founder, Judge William M. Bowen.
Immel To Preside Dr. Ray K. Immel, dean of the School of Speech, will preside at the assembly, which will be broadcast over KFAC. He will introduce Miss Gahagan and Judge Bowen.
Lauded as the outstanding player in the musical success now showing at the Belasco, Helen Gahagan will address the student body on the high lights of her stage career. She will also sing several songs.
In “Tonight or Never”
Misn Gahagan first came to Los Angelas in the title role of “Trewlawney of the Wells,” the all-slar organization of which the late John Drew was a member. Her last previous appearance was in the role of the prima donna in David Belasco's original New York production of “Tonight or Never.” Not only does MiS6 Gahagan possess a rare charm, but she is a young woman who is intensely interested in the theater, in singing, in acting, in direction. She studied voice in Europe and sang there in concert work and grand opera
A cc tanned By Critics
Her personality, acting talents and voice have gained for her an envialle position in her profession. In “The Cat and the Fiddle” her mature and delightful artistry has been widely acclaimed by critics.
F. Clinton Jones, w inner of tbe Bowen contest, will receive the silver loving cup emblematic of first place. Other contestants who will be honored this morning are Roy Johnson, John Raymond, Burton M. Field. Russell Nixon, and John Layng. They also will receive cups.
Limited To Undergraduates
Competition in the contest is limited to undergraduates who have not previously won a cup. Former winners include Ames Craw:ord, Worth Bernard, Cecily Helton. Tom Kuchel, Lockwood Miller and Robert MoffiL John Garth will open this morning's program with an organ selection and he will also play a postlude.
Stage Actress J Corsages Will
Be Banned at Junior Prom
Helen Gahagan, star of “The Cat and the Fiddle,” who will appear in Bovard auditorium assembly this morning.
Hoover Enters Final Campaign
President To Make Three Major Addresses on Palo Alto Trip
ABOARD PRESIDENT HOOVER’S TRAIN. Nov. 3—(UP)— President Hoover was westward bound tonight on a final campaign tour designed to carry him to Palo Alto, California, and home in time to vote Tuesday.
The presidential special -^eft the capital at 4:20 p.m. More than 300 persons gathered at the station applauded and cheered as the president, dressed in a double breasted dark suit, appeared with Mrs. Hoover. She wore a dark brown travelling suit.
Three major political addresses are scheduled on the president’s campaign tour. He will speak at Springfield, 111., tomorrow, at St. Louis, Mo., tomorrow night and at St. Paul, Minn., on Saturday.
The tour across the Mississippi valley and over the Rocky mountain area, however, will be studded with scores of platform appearances in which Mr. Hoover will make a bid for the western vote.
Brief platform addresses beginning with the first stop at Martinsburg, W. Va., were scheduled for the president on the first lap of his trip today. All day Friday he will appeal for support in Indiana and Illinois.
Speech Program To Be Presented
Gene Quaw’s Orchestra To Play at Biltmore For Dance
Social Event Slated for Blue Room of Hotel Next Thursday
I'>anning of corsages at the annual Junior prom at the Biltmore hotel next Thursday night was announced last night by class officers. This is a continuance of a policy established at the social affair last year, they said.
Meanwhile plans are going ahead under the direction of Roy Johnson, class president, to ma..e the event the most important of the fall season. Gene Quaw's Denver Hotel Cosmopolitan orchestra is rehearsing daily in preparation for the prom which will be held in the Blue room of the Biltmore, Nov. 10. Lower Prices
Elimination of corsages is another step in the plan of junior class officials to reduce the cost of the dance. With bids selling at ?3.50, a reduction of $1 over last year’s price, attendance may soar, according to Johnson. Sale of bids are under the direction of Sherman Jensen and ten committeemen, and are sold also at the University Book store cashier’s office.
The selection of Quaw** orches-, tra was cause for optimism in junior headquarters yesterday. Quaw comes to the S. C. prom with a 13 year’s record behind him, beginning with his graduation from Columbia university ln 1919 and his leading of the Curtis hotel orchestra in Minneapolis shortly afterward. He came to the Pacific coast and played at the Maryland hotel in Pasadena when that was the rendevous of dance fans.
Played at Yellowstone
For two summers he played at the Canyon hotel ln Yellowstone National park, alternating in the winters at the Ambassador hotel ln New York. From there he went to the Book-Cadilliae hotel in Detroit, where he remained until last winter, when he came west again to play at the El Cortez in San Diego.
The music of Gene Quaw has been heard over both the Columbia and National broadcasting systems. Quaw will present novelties, a trio and piano numbers during intermission.
Tryouts Started For Junior Play
With the name of the comedy to be announced Monday, candidates for parts in the annual junior class play to be given Dec. 2. are taking added interest in the daily tryouts ,one of the most important of which will be held this afternoon at 3:15 p.m. in Old College 122.
W. Ray MacDonald, play produc-ion director, has revealed that the play will be a fast, clever comedy, adapted from a screen production. The cast will have 15 or 16 characters, affording a large number of Trojan thespians an opportunity to take part Selection of a student director to aid MacDonald will also be announced next week.
Crabbe Is Bitten
At Studio by Lion
By United Press
Buster Crabbe, former Trojan and world swimming champion who turned movie actor when he won a “lion roan contest, was severely bitten by a lion today.
Cast in a picture at Paramount, Crabbe was rehearsing hig first scene when injured. The swimmer *-as engaged in wrestling the bt-ai>t, which became unruly and bit (hia leg.
Announcement of the weekly speech recital to be held this morning at 9 o’clock in O.C. 125, has been made by Mary Cianfoni, president of the School of Speech , student body. Rita Simons will read “The Intimate Disclosures of a Wronged Woman;’ Nanette Rit-tler will present Amy Lowell's “Woman on Dock Three;” and ; Barbara Tondro will give some Chinese Mother Goose rhymes and Louise Ayre Garnet’s “Gloe.” Majors in the School of Speech are required to attend this pro gram, and any other students on campus are Invited to attend, according to Miss Cianfoni. *
Closing Daie Set For Pari-feel Bids
Pan-hellenic tickets will be issued for the last time today during assembly hour in Student Union 210, according to a statement made by Joy Camp, chairman of the ticket committee. “Every delinquent house must send a representative at this time to call for its bids, and present a check covering the amount due,” she said.
Friday, Nov. IS, is the night of this traditional formal dance to be held in the Blue room of the Biltmore hotel. Although sponsored by sorority women, the dance is open to any women on campus. Extra bids may be obtained at the cashier’s window in the University bookstore.
Following the game tomorrow, th.* Mudd Iiall chimes will ring out iii victory songs and the “Alma Maters” of both S. C. and
California.
Four Speeches Herald Close Of 1932 Political Campaign
By United Press
1 rom New Jersey, Idaho, and New York, and Cincinnati, four forceful political speakers addressed large gatherings last night and focused attention on the arguments being advanced in the closing days of the 1932 campaign.
From Princeton, N. J. Newton D. Baker, secretary of war in the Wilson administration attacked the high tariff policies of the Hoover administration and urged an international agreement reducing tariffs 10 per cent annually.
Speaking in the Metropolitan opera house in New York. Owen D. Young, international industrialist and economist, speaking for Governor Roosevelt, charged that the world depression was directly
due to the “vacillation and inde-i cisiou cf the United States since
, 1920.
Lauding the “superb management of Herbert Hoover, secretary of the Interior Ray Lyman Wilbur spoke in Boise in behalf of reelection of the Republican administration.
Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth said in Cincinnatti that she believes the Democrats must be ashamed of themselves for the kind of presidential campaign they are waging. She concluded with the declaration,
"Why should we not shudder at the idea of putting the Democratic party In complete control of the goverment inthese critical times r
Bear Skipper
Bonfire Rally Tonight To Precede Troy-Bear Game
Strong Squad From Cal To Menace Troy
“Navy Bill” Ingram, who leads his Bears against the Trojan War-horse tomorrow, has been pointing for a victory all season.
Cosmopolite To Speak Monday
Madame Dreyfus-Bamey To Talk on Foreign Relations Here
Madame Dreyfus-Baraey, regarded as one of the mo3t widely-traveled experts in the field of international relations, will be guest speaker at the student assmbly to be held in Bovard auditorium Monday morning, it was announced last night by Mulvey Z. White, chairman of the assembly committee.
Although Mme. Dreyfua-Barney’s home is in Paris she has made several world-wide journeys on various missions connected with League of Nations work or as representative of women’s groups interested in world affairs.
Her subject Monday will be “Intellectual Co-operation.” Her fitness as an exponent of this topic Is attested by her position as expert on the League of Nations Intellectual Co-operation Committee.
Mme. Dreyfuj-Barney’s sphere of acquaintance includes some of the most distinguished men in Europe, notably Mussolini, Poincare, Mass-aryk, and others.
Her service with the League dates from its inception immediately after the World War, during which she served in the hospital service and refugees’ relief divisions. The French government has conferred on her the title of Knight of the Legion of Honor.
Roosevelt Wins Literary Digest Presidential Poll
NEW TORK, Nov. 3—(UP)—If the national political poll conducted by the Literary Digest re fleets the true sentiment over the United States, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt will carry his Democrats to victory in 41 states, leaving President Hoover a majority in only seven, it was revealed in the current issue of the publication.
The vote was as follows:
Roosevelt, 1,715,789 or 55.99 per cenL
Hoover, 1,150,398 or 37.53 per cent.
Thomas, 148,079 or 4.84 per cent.
The only states in the Hoover column were from New England and New Jersey. Final returns of the 1928 Digest poll forecast that Hoover would win 42 states. The only states the publication failed to forecast correctly that year were Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
Two Weeks Remain For Senior Pictures
With only two weeks left before Thanksgiving vacation in which senior pictures for El Rodeo must be taken, seniors are again urged by Walter Roberts, editor, to make appointments for sittings as soon as possible.
Because of the short time until the senior pages must be made up, second appointments will not be made in case the first one is broken. Students breaking appointments will have to take a chance on finding the photographer some afternoon when he is not busy and having the pictures taken then, according to Roberts.
Loss of Clash May Mean End of S. C. Hopes For Coast Title
Rally Omirman Auto Caravan, Giant Pyre,
Fight Talks, Street Dance Are Features of Celebration
Jones, Mohler, Silke, Rader Will Speak at Pep Session j Full Program To Be Broadcast From KFAC; Men Are Needed To Haul Wood
By Ed Madrid
Taking up the battle where they left off against the Stanford Indians, Southern Californias battle scarred Trojans answer the challenge of the fighting Golden Bears from Berkeley tomorrow afternoon in the Olympic stadium in the renewal of a grid rivalry dating back to 1915.
Already having run the gauntlet of Utah, Oregon State, Washington State, Loyola, and Stanford successfully, the Thundering Herd goes to the post in defense of its Pacific coast conference and national football title won in 1931. No* since the days of the late Andy Smith’s wonder teams has a Bear sQuad looked so formidable or dangerous as the one facing the Trojans tomorrow.
Determined To Win
Entering the fray with the knowledge that to lose would mean th® termination of their hope to reach the same goal attained by last season’s mighty eleven. Coach Howard Jones and his players are determined to keep their record unblemished or free from defeat. Not once in five encounters has the Trojan goal line been crossed. A stout forw-ard wall that reaches great heights when playing with its back to the wall, has saved the Cardinal-and-Gold warriors time and again from em-barrasing situations.
Beaten twice by Santa Clara and Washington State, California will make its supreme effort of the year in an endeavor to accomplish that which only one team in the nation has been able to do once in 16 games during the past two years, beat the Trojans. St. Mary’s Gallopin’ Gaels triumphed over the men of Troy last year in the first game and this fall they fought California to a 12-12 tie.
Schaldach To Start
With renewed hope after recovery of their sensational halfback and main threat, Hank Schaldach Bill Ingram's men will give the Warhorse a trying test. Schaldach is the original hard luck gentleman. For two years he has set his heart on playing against Troy, but every game he has been forced to watch this contest from the bench because of injuries. His main thought and that of his teammates is to wipe off the overwhelming defeat in ’30 and square accounts with Jones and his team.
Against the confident Cal aggregation Jones will send a squad that will go in to fight, knowing that its reputation is at stake and that even without Mohler they can still play football against the best. Beset by injuries most of the
(Continued on page three)
Stanford Frosh Raid Co-ed Dorm
PALO ALTO, Calif., Nov. 3— (UP)—Thirteen Stanford university freshmen faced expulsion from school after being captured in Roble hall, girl’s dormitory, after a “raid” in which 36 pajama-clad first-year men invaded the hall tonight.
Scantily clad co-eds created a bedlam of screams as the “invaders” for half an hour ran shouting and whooping down corridors on the three floors of the hall.
Windows were broken and tables and chairs smashed to bits as the “attackers” stormed the hall from three sides.
The “attack” is a traditional affair made each year after the university “pajamerino rally.”
After 30 minutes of triumph, the “invaders” realized they might be trapped. All but 13 managed to escape. One, it was reported, hid under a bed, was shielded by occupants of the room and quietly slipped out a window and down a fire escape,
I
Joe Bushard, Knight chairman of the rally committee, has been assisting Harvey Lewis and Ernie Oswald with plans for the bonfire rally and dance tonight.
Frosh Debate Squad Chosen
Eight Man Team Selected To Represent S. C. in Freshman Tilts
Surviving a spirited competition between 13 closely-matched orators, eight men were chosen yesterday by Coach Allen Nichols as those best fitted to represent S.C. during the coming freshman debate season.
Those chosen as winners of the squad tryouts held Wednesday are: Fred Conrad, Erwin Ellmann, Arthur Groman, Gilbert May, Henry A. Reese, Phillip Shacknove, Israel Shapiro, and Crispus Wright.
The first meeting of the squad will be held next Wednesday afternoon in the debate office, at which time plans for an extensive campaign against various junior college and freshman teams will be discussed.
The subject for debate during the first term will be “Resolved: that the United States should agree to the cancellation of the inter-allied war debts.” This same subject w-as used for the tryouts, so that much research has already been done by the squad on both sides of the question.
Coach Nichols stated that due to the general excellence of the men chosen, a highly successful season is anticipated.
Dr. Hunt Will Be Host at Graduate Open House Today
Graduate students will have their second open house of the semester today from 3:30 to 5 o’clock in the Y. W. C. A. house.
Dr. Rockwell Dennis Hunt, dean of the Graduate school, will be the host of the affair. He urges j that all students take this opportunity to become better acquainted.
Cal-S.C. Debate Draws Interest
Troy To Uphold President In the ‘Roosevelt vs. Hoover’ Contest
By Ted Magee
With a lurid background of flame from a huge bonfirf leaping high into the sky, Trojan rooters will gather tonight in the greatest pep session of the year following a mammoth parade from the campus.
The auto trek from the walls of Troy on University avenue
will commence at 7 p.m., led by a*----“
cordon of motorcycle officers and the Trojan band. Weaving its w-ay westward to the scene of the bonfire at La Cienega and Olympic boulevards, the parace will break up in a huge vacant lot that will accommodate hundreds of rooters’ cars.
Featured speakers, including Coach Howard Jones, will make ! snappy, pointed talks as the flames lick up the mighty pyre and l^p defiantly into the sky.
Rally To Go On Air
A radio broadcast commencing at 8 p.m. will carry the voices of Coach Jones, Harry Silke, assistant comptroller, California Student President Rader, S. C.’s President Orv Mohler, and Yell King Bailey | Edgerton.
j The rally program will be broad-| cast over KFAC.
When the mighty fire is at the height of its blaze, a parade will be formed around the pyre led by the Trojan band. Edgerton will lead cheers
Comb City for Wood
That the fire will be the greatest in S. C.’s history, was the statement of Harvey Lewis and Ernie
With last minute calls for hundreds of tickets for the California—S. C. debate Monday night in Bovard auditorium, widespread interest is being shown in the “Roosevelt vs. Hoover” debate on the eve of the election.
Already several thousand tickets have been distributed and mor« are demanded. Many campus groups and southern California high schools are sending representative^ to the contest. Coming soon after the Cal — S. C. game and just before the election, the debate is drawing widespread interest.
S. C. Will Uphold Hoover
Debate Captain Ames Crawford and Robert North will represent
Oswald, co-chairmen of the commit ,
t«. last night as hundreds ot Tro- ?• C - and «phoM Hoorer hl ti.
jan student volunteers continued to comb the city for fuel.
Other workers, already tired from a day’s hard exertion, were spending the night guarding the great pile of railroad ties, planks, and boxes from possible marauders. The guarding was being done by a carefully planned system of bonfires with a number of men stationed at each small fire.
Work on the pyre will be renewed early today by student leaders. A plea was issued last night for as many men as possible to turn out today and help build the great heap of wood into the school’s biggest bonfire tower. Work will go on all day. Student identification cards must be carried before admittance to the grounds will be allowed.
Dance To Follow
A street dance on 28th street, featuring Satchel McVea’s orchestra, will follow the rally. It was emphasized last night by Joe Bushard, president of the Knights, that the dance would not commence until everyone had been given ample time to return from the rally to fraternity row.
Special police detachments will guide traffic during the rally, making it possible for everyone to see al) the excitement without undue delay. Traffic conjestions like those at last year's bonfire will not be encountered, Bushard stated, pointing out that the Knight organ ization had had the opportunity ot studying the problem in the light of previous experience.
debate in Bovard Monday at 8:15 p.m. Last minute changes have transferred Lawrence Pritchard from the Roosevelt case to the Hoover side and he is now pre* paring to debate with Crawford in tbe radio broadcast Monday afternoon, which is a decision debate.
Waiting only for the Ruth Alexander to sail early Sunday morning, James Jacobs and Martya j Agens, Hoover speakers, are competing for the opportunity to go to Palo Alto and debate the question, “Resolved: that the present administration should be returned to power in 1932.”
California Speakers Named
In the California — S. C. contests here Monday, California will be represented by R .H. Thurmond and Alvin Morse. Bernard announced last night that Trojan# interested in seeing the radio debate broadcast Monday are welcome to the KHJ studios, 1076 W. Seventh street.
Tickets for the Monday night tilt in Bovard may be received at the ticket window in the Student Union. They will also be on sal* Monday night at the box office, according to Manager Bernard.
Stadium Workers for Cal. Game Announced by Adams
With a large list of men assigned for duty, Leo Adams, assistant general manager, last night announced the names of the men working at the Trojan-Bear football game at the Olympic stadium tomorrow.
Warning those who are working that they must wear the customary white shirt and rooter’s cap, Adams stated that failure to comply with this regulation w-ill necessitate in the dismissal of the individual who fails to follow instructions. Everyone must also be at his appointed place on time.
Guards—6 a.m.
Men report to peristyle at 6 a.m. to gate 33 to Mickey Chat-bum; Frank Hansen, Wayn«
Parking Men To Report Tomorrow
Men who are to work in th* parking lot for the California} game are asked to see Otis Bias*! ingham at 10:30 Saturday mor> ing at the Mudd hall parking lot.j Rooters’ caps and white shirtjj must be worn, Blasingham stad.
The following are requested tot report: Clarence Anderson, Georgsj Snow, Tom Ryan, Joe Cook, Ken- I Buchanan. Ray Arbuthnot, Mar-j neth Hutchins, Clyde Sveten, John sha11 Wells. Harold Foss, Graham.
Stevenson, Gordon Smith, Robert Pollard, Eddie Kuntz, Milton Norman, George Brown, Carl Haugh-ton, Wallace Burgess, Ed Hallock, S. H. Parr, Lowell Redlings, and Howard Paul.
Guards
Men report to Oliver Chatburn at 10 a.m. to tunnel 6: W. D. Burgess, George Zeltper, Jack Hol-gate, Gordon Warner, Ford Sams, John Stevenson, Charles Webber, Dale Ferguson, Ralph Hilmer, and John Morrow.
Gatemen Men report to Oliver Chatburn, tunnel 6 at 10 a.m.
(Continued on page four)
Berry, Jack Gardner, Robert Mat-; thews, Charles Webber, Georget Blewitt, Thomas Kimble, Sax El-i liott. Hop Findley, Everett Winn,i Dick Phares, and Bill Smith. '
Instructor to Talk to Business Women
Dr. Florence May Morse, in-T structor in, and acting director! of, the School of Merchandising.’ will address the Brawley Businiss* 1 and Professional Women’s club tomorrow evening. The occasion i» the presentation of a new charter to the club from the National Federation by Dr. Mora*

United Pre#s
World Wide
News Service
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Special Feature Edition For California Game
Vol. XXIV
Los Angeles, California, Friday, November 4, 1932.
No. 40
Helen Gahagan To Appear On I Stage Today
Judge William M. Bowen Will Present Debate Cups to Orators
F. Clinton Jones To Get First Place Award in Annual Contest
Helfn Gahagan. star of the current Belasco production, “The Cat and the Fiddle,” will be presented in assembly in Bovard auditorium at 9:55 this morning, Mulvey White, assistant secretary to the president announced last night.
In addition, winners of the Bowen extemporaneous speech contest " ill be presented with silver loving cups by the contest founder, Judge William M. Bowen.
Immel To Preside Dr. Ray K. Immel, dean of the School of Speech, will preside at the assembly, which will be broadcast over KFAC. He will introduce Miss Gahagan and Judge Bowen.
Lauded as the outstanding player in the musical success now showing at the Belasco, Helen Gahagan will address the student body on the high lights of her stage career. She will also sing several songs.
In “Tonight or Never”
Misn Gahagan first came to Los Angelas in the title role of “Trewlawney of the Wells,” the all-slar organization of which the late John Drew was a member. Her last previous appearance was in the role of the prima donna in David Belasco's original New York production of “Tonight or Never.” Not only does MiS6 Gahagan possess a rare charm, but she is a young woman who is intensely interested in the theater, in singing, in acting, in direction. She studied voice in Europe and sang there in concert work and grand opera
A cc tanned By Critics
Her personality, acting talents and voice have gained for her an envialle position in her profession. In “The Cat and the Fiddle” her mature and delightful artistry has been widely acclaimed by critics.
F. Clinton Jones, w inner of tbe Bowen contest, will receive the silver loving cup emblematic of first place. Other contestants who will be honored this morning are Roy Johnson, John Raymond, Burton M. Field. Russell Nixon, and John Layng. They also will receive cups.
Limited To Undergraduates
Competition in the contest is limited to undergraduates who have not previously won a cup. Former winners include Ames Craw:ord, Worth Bernard, Cecily Helton. Tom Kuchel, Lockwood Miller and Robert MoffiL John Garth will open this morning's program with an organ selection and he will also play a postlude.
Stage Actress J Corsages Will
Be Banned at Junior Prom
Helen Gahagan, star of “The Cat and the Fiddle,” who will appear in Bovard auditorium assembly this morning.
Hoover Enters Final Campaign
President To Make Three Major Addresses on Palo Alto Trip
ABOARD PRESIDENT HOOVER’S TRAIN. Nov. 3—(UP)— President Hoover was westward bound tonight on a final campaign tour designed to carry him to Palo Alto, California, and home in time to vote Tuesday.
The presidential special -^eft the capital at 4:20 p.m. More than 300 persons gathered at the station applauded and cheered as the president, dressed in a double breasted dark suit, appeared with Mrs. Hoover. She wore a dark brown travelling suit.
Three major political addresses are scheduled on the president’s campaign tour. He will speak at Springfield, 111., tomorrow, at St. Louis, Mo., tomorrow night and at St. Paul, Minn., on Saturday.
The tour across the Mississippi valley and over the Rocky mountain area, however, will be studded with scores of platform appearances in which Mr. Hoover will make a bid for the western vote.
Brief platform addresses beginning with the first stop at Martinsburg, W. Va., were scheduled for the president on the first lap of his trip today. All day Friday he will appeal for support in Indiana and Illinois.
Speech Program To Be Presented
Gene Quaw’s Orchestra To Play at Biltmore For Dance
Social Event Slated for Blue Room of Hotel Next Thursday
I'>anning of corsages at the annual Junior prom at the Biltmore hotel next Thursday night was announced last night by class officers. This is a continuance of a policy established at the social affair last year, they said.
Meanwhile plans are going ahead under the direction of Roy Johnson, class president, to ma..e the event the most important of the fall season. Gene Quaw's Denver Hotel Cosmopolitan orchestra is rehearsing daily in preparation for the prom which will be held in the Blue room of the Biltmore, Nov. 10. Lower Prices
Elimination of corsages is another step in the plan of junior class officials to reduce the cost of the dance. With bids selling at ?3.50, a reduction of $1 over last year’s price, attendance may soar, according to Johnson. Sale of bids are under the direction of Sherman Jensen and ten committeemen, and are sold also at the University Book store cashier’s office.
The selection of Quaw** orches-, tra was cause for optimism in junior headquarters yesterday. Quaw comes to the S. C. prom with a 13 year’s record behind him, beginning with his graduation from Columbia university ln 1919 and his leading of the Curtis hotel orchestra in Minneapolis shortly afterward. He came to the Pacific coast and played at the Maryland hotel in Pasadena when that was the rendevous of dance fans.
Played at Yellowstone
For two summers he played at the Canyon hotel ln Yellowstone National park, alternating in the winters at the Ambassador hotel ln New York. From there he went to the Book-Cadilliae hotel in Detroit, where he remained until last winter, when he came west again to play at the El Cortez in San Diego.
The music of Gene Quaw has been heard over both the Columbia and National broadcasting systems. Quaw will present novelties, a trio and piano numbers during intermission.
Tryouts Started For Junior Play
With the name of the comedy to be announced Monday, candidates for parts in the annual junior class play to be given Dec. 2. are taking added interest in the daily tryouts ,one of the most important of which will be held this afternoon at 3:15 p.m. in Old College 122.
W. Ray MacDonald, play produc-ion director, has revealed that the play will be a fast, clever comedy, adapted from a screen production. The cast will have 15 or 16 characters, affording a large number of Trojan thespians an opportunity to take part Selection of a student director to aid MacDonald will also be announced next week.
Crabbe Is Bitten
At Studio by Lion
By United Press
Buster Crabbe, former Trojan and world swimming champion who turned movie actor when he won a “lion roan contest, was severely bitten by a lion today.
Cast in a picture at Paramount, Crabbe was rehearsing hig first scene when injured. The swimmer *-as engaged in wrestling the bt-ai>t, which became unruly and bit (hia leg.
Announcement of the weekly speech recital to be held this morning at 9 o’clock in O.C. 125, has been made by Mary Cianfoni, president of the School of Speech , student body. Rita Simons will read “The Intimate Disclosures of a Wronged Woman;’ Nanette Rit-tler will present Amy Lowell's “Woman on Dock Three;” and ; Barbara Tondro will give some Chinese Mother Goose rhymes and Louise Ayre Garnet’s “Gloe.” Majors in the School of Speech are required to attend this pro gram, and any other students on campus are Invited to attend, according to Miss Cianfoni. *
Closing Daie Set For Pari-feel Bids
Pan-hellenic tickets will be issued for the last time today during assembly hour in Student Union 210, according to a statement made by Joy Camp, chairman of the ticket committee. “Every delinquent house must send a representative at this time to call for its bids, and present a check covering the amount due,” she said.
Friday, Nov. IS, is the night of this traditional formal dance to be held in the Blue room of the Biltmore hotel. Although sponsored by sorority women, the dance is open to any women on campus. Extra bids may be obtained at the cashier’s window in the University bookstore.
Following the game tomorrow, th.* Mudd Iiall chimes will ring out iii victory songs and the “Alma Maters” of both S. C. and
California.
Four Speeches Herald Close Of 1932 Political Campaign
By United Press
1 rom New Jersey, Idaho, and New York, and Cincinnati, four forceful political speakers addressed large gatherings last night and focused attention on the arguments being advanced in the closing days of the 1932 campaign.
From Princeton, N. J. Newton D. Baker, secretary of war in the Wilson administration attacked the high tariff policies of the Hoover administration and urged an international agreement reducing tariffs 10 per cent annually.
Speaking in the Metropolitan opera house in New York. Owen D. Young, international industrialist and economist, speaking for Governor Roosevelt, charged that the world depression was directly
due to the “vacillation and inde-i cisiou cf the United States since
, 1920.
Lauding the “superb management of Herbert Hoover, secretary of the Interior Ray Lyman Wilbur spoke in Boise in behalf of reelection of the Republican administration.
Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth said in Cincinnatti that she believes the Democrats must be ashamed of themselves for the kind of presidential campaign they are waging. She concluded with the declaration,
"Why should we not shudder at the idea of putting the Democratic party In complete control of the goverment inthese critical times r
Bear Skipper
Bonfire Rally Tonight To Precede Troy-Bear Game
Strong Squad From Cal To Menace Troy
“Navy Bill” Ingram, who leads his Bears against the Trojan War-horse tomorrow, has been pointing for a victory all season.
Cosmopolite To Speak Monday
Madame Dreyfus-Bamey To Talk on Foreign Relations Here
Madame Dreyfus-Baraey, regarded as one of the mo3t widely-traveled experts in the field of international relations, will be guest speaker at the student assmbly to be held in Bovard auditorium Monday morning, it was announced last night by Mulvey Z. White, chairman of the assembly committee.
Although Mme. Dreyfua-Barney’s home is in Paris she has made several world-wide journeys on various missions connected with League of Nations work or as representative of women’s groups interested in world affairs.
Her subject Monday will be “Intellectual Co-operation.” Her fitness as an exponent of this topic Is attested by her position as expert on the League of Nations Intellectual Co-operation Committee.
Mme. Dreyfuj-Barney’s sphere of acquaintance includes some of the most distinguished men in Europe, notably Mussolini, Poincare, Mass-aryk, and others.
Her service with the League dates from its inception immediately after the World War, during which she served in the hospital service and refugees’ relief divisions. The French government has conferred on her the title of Knight of the Legion of Honor.
Roosevelt Wins Literary Digest Presidential Poll
NEW TORK, Nov. 3—(UP)—If the national political poll conducted by the Literary Digest re fleets the true sentiment over the United States, Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt will carry his Democrats to victory in 41 states, leaving President Hoover a majority in only seven, it was revealed in the current issue of the publication.
The vote was as follows:
Roosevelt, 1,715,789 or 55.99 per cenL
Hoover, 1,150,398 or 37.53 per cent.
Thomas, 148,079 or 4.84 per cent.
The only states in the Hoover column were from New England and New Jersey. Final returns of the 1928 Digest poll forecast that Hoover would win 42 states. The only states the publication failed to forecast correctly that year were Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
Two Weeks Remain For Senior Pictures
With only two weeks left before Thanksgiving vacation in which senior pictures for El Rodeo must be taken, seniors are again urged by Walter Roberts, editor, to make appointments for sittings as soon as possible.
Because of the short time until the senior pages must be made up, second appointments will not be made in case the first one is broken. Students breaking appointments will have to take a chance on finding the photographer some afternoon when he is not busy and having the pictures taken then, according to Roberts.
Loss of Clash May Mean End of S. C. Hopes For Coast Title
Rally Omirman Auto Caravan, Giant Pyre,
Fight Talks, Street Dance Are Features of Celebration
Jones, Mohler, Silke, Rader Will Speak at Pep Session j Full Program To Be Broadcast From KFAC; Men Are Needed To Haul Wood
By Ed Madrid
Taking up the battle where they left off against the Stanford Indians, Southern Californias battle scarred Trojans answer the challenge of the fighting Golden Bears from Berkeley tomorrow afternoon in the Olympic stadium in the renewal of a grid rivalry dating back to 1915.
Already having run the gauntlet of Utah, Oregon State, Washington State, Loyola, and Stanford successfully, the Thundering Herd goes to the post in defense of its Pacific coast conference and national football title won in 1931. No* since the days of the late Andy Smith’s wonder teams has a Bear sQuad looked so formidable or dangerous as the one facing the Trojans tomorrow.
Determined To Win
Entering the fray with the knowledge that to lose would mean th® termination of their hope to reach the same goal attained by last season’s mighty eleven. Coach Howard Jones and his players are determined to keep their record unblemished or free from defeat. Not once in five encounters has the Trojan goal line been crossed. A stout forw-ard wall that reaches great heights when playing with its back to the wall, has saved the Cardinal-and-Gold warriors time and again from em-barrasing situations.
Beaten twice by Santa Clara and Washington State, California will make its supreme effort of the year in an endeavor to accomplish that which only one team in the nation has been able to do once in 16 games during the past two years, beat the Trojans. St. Mary’s Gallopin’ Gaels triumphed over the men of Troy last year in the first game and this fall they fought California to a 12-12 tie.
Schaldach To Start
With renewed hope after recovery of their sensational halfback and main threat, Hank Schaldach Bill Ingram's men will give the Warhorse a trying test. Schaldach is the original hard luck gentleman. For two years he has set his heart on playing against Troy, but every game he has been forced to watch this contest from the bench because of injuries. His main thought and that of his teammates is to wipe off the overwhelming defeat in ’30 and square accounts with Jones and his team.
Against the confident Cal aggregation Jones will send a squad that will go in to fight, knowing that its reputation is at stake and that even without Mohler they can still play football against the best. Beset by injuries most of the
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Stanford Frosh Raid Co-ed Dorm
PALO ALTO, Calif., Nov. 3— (UP)—Thirteen Stanford university freshmen faced expulsion from school after being captured in Roble hall, girl’s dormitory, after a “raid” in which 36 pajama-clad first-year men invaded the hall tonight.
Scantily clad co-eds created a bedlam of screams as the “invaders” for half an hour ran shouting and whooping down corridors on the three floors of the hall.
Windows were broken and tables and chairs smashed to bits as the “attackers” stormed the hall from three sides.
The “attack” is a traditional affair made each year after the university “pajamerino rally.”
After 30 minutes of triumph, the “invaders” realized they might be trapped. All but 13 managed to escape. One, it was reported, hid under a bed, was shielded by occupants of the room and quietly slipped out a window and down a fire escape,
I
Joe Bushard, Knight chairman of the rally committee, has been assisting Harvey Lewis and Ernie Oswald with plans for the bonfire rally and dance tonight.
Frosh Debate Squad Chosen
Eight Man Team Selected To Represent S. C. in Freshman Tilts
Surviving a spirited competition between 13 closely-matched orators, eight men were chosen yesterday by Coach Allen Nichols as those best fitted to represent S.C. during the coming freshman debate season.
Those chosen as winners of the squad tryouts held Wednesday are: Fred Conrad, Erwin Ellmann, Arthur Groman, Gilbert May, Henry A. Reese, Phillip Shacknove, Israel Shapiro, and Crispus Wright.
The first meeting of the squad will be held next Wednesday afternoon in the debate office, at which time plans for an extensive campaign against various junior college and freshman teams will be discussed.
The subject for debate during the first term will be “Resolved: that the United States should agree to the cancellation of the inter-allied war debts.” This same subject w-as used for the tryouts, so that much research has already been done by the squad on both sides of the question.
Coach Nichols stated that due to the general excellence of the men chosen, a highly successful season is anticipated.
Dr. Hunt Will Be Host at Graduate Open House Today
Graduate students will have their second open house of the semester today from 3:30 to 5 o’clock in the Y. W. C. A. house.
Dr. Rockwell Dennis Hunt, dean of the Graduate school, will be the host of the affair. He urges j that all students take this opportunity to become better acquainted.
Cal-S.C. Debate Draws Interest
Troy To Uphold President In the ‘Roosevelt vs. Hoover’ Contest
By Ted Magee
With a lurid background of flame from a huge bonfirf leaping high into the sky, Trojan rooters will gather tonight in the greatest pep session of the year following a mammoth parade from the campus.
The auto trek from the walls of Troy on University avenue
will commence at 7 p.m., led by a*----“
cordon of motorcycle officers and the Trojan band. Weaving its w-ay westward to the scene of the bonfire at La Cienega and Olympic boulevards, the parace will break up in a huge vacant lot that will accommodate hundreds of rooters’ cars.
Featured speakers, including Coach Howard Jones, will make ! snappy, pointed talks as the flames lick up the mighty pyre and l^p defiantly into the sky.
Rally To Go On Air
A radio broadcast commencing at 8 p.m. will carry the voices of Coach Jones, Harry Silke, assistant comptroller, California Student President Rader, S. C.’s President Orv Mohler, and Yell King Bailey | Edgerton.
j The rally program will be broad-| cast over KFAC.
When the mighty fire is at the height of its blaze, a parade will be formed around the pyre led by the Trojan band. Edgerton will lead cheers
Comb City for Wood
That the fire will be the greatest in S. C.’s history, was the statement of Harvey Lewis and Ernie
With last minute calls for hundreds of tickets for the California—S. C. debate Monday night in Bovard auditorium, widespread interest is being shown in the “Roosevelt vs. Hoover” debate on the eve of the election.
Already several thousand tickets have been distributed and mor« are demanded. Many campus groups and southern California high schools are sending representative^ to the contest. Coming soon after the Cal — S. C. game and just before the election, the debate is drawing widespread interest.
S. C. Will Uphold Hoover
Debate Captain Ames Crawford and Robert North will represent
Oswald, co-chairmen of the commit ,
t«. last night as hundreds ot Tro- ?• C - and «phoM Hoorer hl ti.
jan student volunteers continued to comb the city for fuel.
Other workers, already tired from a day’s hard exertion, were spending the night guarding the great pile of railroad ties, planks, and boxes from possible marauders. The guarding was being done by a carefully planned system of bonfires with a number of men stationed at each small fire.
Work on the pyre will be renewed early today by student leaders. A plea was issued last night for as many men as possible to turn out today and help build the great heap of wood into the school’s biggest bonfire tower. Work will go on all day. Student identification cards must be carried before admittance to the grounds will be allowed.
Dance To Follow
A street dance on 28th street, featuring Satchel McVea’s orchestra, will follow the rally. It was emphasized last night by Joe Bushard, president of the Knights, that the dance would not commence until everyone had been given ample time to return from the rally to fraternity row.
Special police detachments will guide traffic during the rally, making it possible for everyone to see al) the excitement without undue delay. Traffic conjestions like those at last year's bonfire will not be encountered, Bushard stated, pointing out that the Knight organ ization had had the opportunity ot studying the problem in the light of previous experience.
debate in Bovard Monday at 8:15 p.m. Last minute changes have transferred Lawrence Pritchard from the Roosevelt case to the Hoover side and he is now pre* paring to debate with Crawford in tbe radio broadcast Monday afternoon, which is a decision debate.
Waiting only for the Ruth Alexander to sail early Sunday morning, James Jacobs and Martya j Agens, Hoover speakers, are competing for the opportunity to go to Palo Alto and debate the question, “Resolved: that the present administration should be returned to power in 1932.”
California Speakers Named
In the California — S. C. contests here Monday, California will be represented by R .H. Thurmond and Alvin Morse. Bernard announced last night that Trojan# interested in seeing the radio debate broadcast Monday are welcome to the KHJ studios, 1076 W. Seventh street.
Tickets for the Monday night tilt in Bovard may be received at the ticket window in the Student Union. They will also be on sal* Monday night at the box office, according to Manager Bernard.
Stadium Workers for Cal. Game Announced by Adams
With a large list of men assigned for duty, Leo Adams, assistant general manager, last night announced the names of the men working at the Trojan-Bear football game at the Olympic stadium tomorrow.
Warning those who are working that they must wear the customary white shirt and rooter’s cap, Adams stated that failure to comply with this regulation w-ill necessitate in the dismissal of the individual who fails to follow instructions. Everyone must also be at his appointed place on time.
Guards—6 a.m.
Men report to peristyle at 6 a.m. to gate 33 to Mickey Chat-bum; Frank Hansen, Wayn«
Parking Men To Report Tomorrow
Men who are to work in th* parking lot for the California} game are asked to see Otis Bias*! ingham at 10:30 Saturday mor> ing at the Mudd hall parking lot.j Rooters’ caps and white shirtjj must be worn, Blasingham stad.
The following are requested tot report: Clarence Anderson, Georgsj Snow, Tom Ryan, Joe Cook, Ken- I Buchanan. Ray Arbuthnot, Mar-j neth Hutchins, Clyde Sveten, John sha11 Wells. Harold Foss, Graham.
Stevenson, Gordon Smith, Robert Pollard, Eddie Kuntz, Milton Norman, George Brown, Carl Haugh-ton, Wallace Burgess, Ed Hallock, S. H. Parr, Lowell Redlings, and Howard Paul.
Guards
Men report to Oliver Chatburn at 10 a.m. to tunnel 6: W. D. Burgess, George Zeltper, Jack Hol-gate, Gordon Warner, Ford Sams, John Stevenson, Charles Webber, Dale Ferguson, Ralph Hilmer, and John Morrow.
Gatemen Men report to Oliver Chatburn, tunnel 6 at 10 a.m.
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Berry, Jack Gardner, Robert Mat-; thews, Charles Webber, Georget Blewitt, Thomas Kimble, Sax El-i liott. Hop Findley, Everett Winn,i Dick Phares, and Bill Smith. '
Instructor to Talk to Business Women
Dr. Florence May Morse, in-T structor in, and acting director! of, the School of Merchandising.’ will address the Brawley Businiss* 1 and Professional Women’s club tomorrow evening. The occasion i» the presentation of a new charter to the club from the National Federation by Dr. Mora*